American Ranger Pages

Monday, November 11, 2013

I was honored today to be the speaker at the Veterans Day event at the Altamonte Mall in Altamonte Springs, Florida.

Following are my comments from earlier today:

"It’s an honor to be here with all of you today on this
Veterans Day for 2013. Joining us are
those who served in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm, Panama,
Grenada, Somalia, Iraq or Afghanistan. Some of you served in multiple wars;
many of you served in peacetime, manning those watch towers of freedom
throughout the world.

Perhaps you are the family members of those who served. You
know, in a very big way, you’re also veterans because you guarded the home
front in our absence, patiently – though nervously – waiting for our return.
You must surely know that it was the comforting thoughts of you - and the
memories of the green grass of home - that gave us the spirit and determination
to do everything possible to come home to you.

It is now the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month.
This day began as Armistice Day to celebrate the agreement that brought an end
to World War I in 1918.

In 1954, veteran’s service organizations urged Congress to
change the word "Armistice" to "Veterans". Congress approved this change and November
11th became a day to honor all American veterans, where ever and whenever they
had served.

I am greatly blessed to have served as an American soldier.
My own service stretched over a 41 year period with three breaks in that service.
I finally managed to get 22 years that were good enough for retirement. During
that time, I was either in the active Army, the Army National Guard, or the
Army Reserve.

But the good thing about taking so long to retire is that I
got to serve with other soldiers in part of the ‘60s, the ‘70s, the 80s, the
90s, and most of the first decade of the 21st century. As a very young, brand
new Ranger, I served with men who had fought in World War II, Korea, as well as
in Vietnam. As a grizzled old sergeant, I was fortunate to serve in Iraq with
some of the best trained young soldiers I have ever known.

In fact, I am wearing this Stetson to honor the men I served with
in the First Cavalry Division in Vietnam. I am wearing my Desert Camouflage Uniform
shirt from Iraq to honor the troops I served with there in Special Operations
and Civil Affairs.

I grew up here in Central Florida as the proud son of a
World War II infantryman. When I was a
little kid, I would play soldier like most little boys, wearing my father’s
uniforms, his helmet liner, or his Eisenhower jacket. When I was about six
years old in the mid ‘50s, I rode in an Army Reserve jeep with my father, Major
John Grist, during a Christmas parade in downtown Winter Park. The spectators
cheered the marching soldiers, and I kind of felt like I was in the Army too.

I grew up hearing stories about my own ancestors who fought
in every one of America’s wars, including the American Revolution. I like to
say that I’m a “Grandson” of the original Sons of Liberty, the dedicated group
of patriots who began America’s war of independence.

Remember that it was Ben Franklin who was once asked at the
end of the Constitutional Convention: “Well, what have we got – a Republic or a
Monarchy?” Franklin replied, “A Republic - if you can keep it.” The task of
defending that Republic would ultimately fall to members of America’s armed
forces. And they have done a masterful job.

But now I’m just another old soldier who’s proud of his
service, but who has to stand aside for a new generation of American warriors.
That’s okay; but if these kids need backup, I promise you my fellow veterans
and I will get there as soon as we can.

You know, the first week I arrived in Baghdad in early 2004,
I ran into three young soldiers from the First Cavalry Division who had also
just arrived. I asked them which battalion they were with, and they said they
were with the Second Battalion of the Eighth Cavalry. That was the unit I
served with in Vietnam. When I told them I had served with the same unit 34
years earlier, the poor young troopers looked like they’d seen a ghost. I guess
I would have felt the same way back in 1970 if I met a soldier in Vietnam who
had been in the Army in 1936.

Tennyson wrote about old soldiers in the poem “Ulysses.” He
said, and I quote:

"Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’

We are not now that strength which in old days

Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;

One equal temper of heroic hearts,

Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will

To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield."

My parents and their contemporaries were members of that
“Greatest Generation” that helped save the world from the brutality of Nazi and
Japanese fascism.

As they guided our country through those terrible times,
they followed the examples of their own parents who fought courageously in
Europe during World War I in what everyone at the time believed was the “War to
End all Wars”.

America is also fortunate that the service of our veterans doesn’t
end with their military experience. They return to their families, finish their
education, and move on to contribute to society in countless ways for their
entire lives. America receives the benefits of everything its veterans learned
about every aspect of life. I think those traits are described quite well in
the Army values of loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity,
and personal courage.

As veterans, we are grateful that our fellow citizens honor
our service today, even as days like this heighten our own memories of other
times and other places.

We’ll always remember things like:

• Standing guard in a lonely bunker,
anticipating an attack that may or may not come;

• Waiting for the door of the landing
craft to drop so we could rush into the machine gun fire of the enemy;

• Sitting in the open door of a Huey
helicopter as it descends to a jungle filled with people who want to kill us;

• Riding a convoy down some deadly road
waiting for an improvised explosive device to disintegrate our Humvee;

• Staring into the faces of our dead
comrades – either on the field of battle or late at night in our dreams;

• Enemy
bullets whizzing by our heads;

• The shaking of the ground as a rocket
or mortar explodes nearby;

• The frightening sound of an exploding
rocket-propelled grenade as it sends razor-sharp pieces of shrapnel in a
thousand directions;

• Every single detail of the day we got
that jagged scar on our arm or leg;

• And the constant stress of living
your life on red alert twenty-four hours a day;

In fact, I’m sure that some of the veterans here today
remember trying to get as close to the ground as possible in rather difficult
circumstances, praying that God would somehow let us get closer to the ground
than the buttons on our uniforms.

In all of America’s wars, our troops have served
courageously, and today we remember all of the good things about our veterans
and their dedication to preserving our way of life. But I do feel an obligation
to remind all of us of some of the hardships faced by both the current
generation of returning veterans and some of their predecessors. Those
difficulties include trouble finding jobs, homelessness, and PTSD –
post-traumatic stress disorder.

A great many veterans from America’s wars have a hard time
living with all the memories of war. What used to be called “shell shocked” in
World War I or “battle fatigue” in World War II has become “post-traumatic
stress disorder” in the modern world. We understand it better, we have more
efficient ways of helping our veterans, but we have to get them to ask for that
help.

You know, it is a terrible thing for our troops to walk to
the very edge of hell, look into the depths of that fiery pit, and then walk
away. They are certainly grateful to be alive, but they will never forget the
horrors of what they saw. Their youthful innocence is gone forever; they are
still young, but in their souls they have aged far beyond their years.

My father-in-law is 89 years old. He still remembers when
Japanese kamikaze pilots crashed their planes into the USS Ticonderoga, killing
many of his friends. He has frequent nightmares where he sees the enemy planes
crashing into the ship. He remembers trying – but failing – to reach his
friends in a blazing inferno. He also remembers the solemn ceremony as each of
them was buried at sea. After years of encouragement, he finally went to the
Veteran’s Administration and was diagnosed with PTSD, decades after his wartime
experiences.

After I returned from Vietnam, I had a couple of not-so-good
years myself. Unlike my welcome home from Iraq when we were met by cheering crowds
in Bangor, Maine waving signs, patting us on the back, and thanking us for our
service, my family members were the only ones who ever welcomed me home in
1971. We kind of kept our service to ourselves back then, confiding only in
fellow war veterans – and sometimes not even to them. We kept it all inside
where the memories festered like sores that wouldn’t heal. We were proud of our
service, but it seemed like no one else was.

Different generations, different wars. I was stationed at
Fort Stewart, Georgia in 2003 as we helped mobilize some of the first units
that would serve in Iraq. While off post in uniform at a gas station, an
elderly woman walked up to me. She shook my hand, and then said a thick British
accent: “I’m not really sure about this war, but we’ve always loved the Yanks.”
I was very grateful for her acknowledgement of my service.

There are many veterans from all of America’s wars who have empty
places inside. It’s where we keep the tragic memories of old battlefields along
with the faces of our fellow troops who were badly wounded or who didn’t come
back home. For me, I remember men from Vietnam like Staff Sergeant James, Sgt.
Dowjotas, and Sgt. Brzenski, men I joked with one moment only to stare at their
faces shortly afterwards as they were zipped into rubber body bags. Their loss
was painful for us - their comrades, but I felt so very sad for their mothers,
their fathers, their wives, their children, and all the others who would have
to learn to live without them.

I remember those I knew from Iraq like PFC Nichole Frye –
killed by an improvised explosive device at the age of 19. Or Staff Sergeant
Cerniglia – a man I knew for years in the Army Reserve. He was critically
wounded in Sadr City in Baghdad, but he survived. When I saw him in the
hospital in the Green Zone, he tried to joke with me, but he was still in shock
and would never even remember that I was there. Or Sergeant First Class
McKinney, severely wounded by a suicide vest detonated by one of the Iraqi
police officers he had been training.

Yet, it doesn’t end there. Most veterans come home and adapt
well to stateside life, even with the outside or inside wounds. Others don’t. After
my return from Iraq, I was assigned to uniform patrol on the night shift. It
was then that I first responded to calls involving some of our newest war
veterans.

One of them was a newly married but slightly intoxicated young
Marine in his full dress uniform with a Global War On Terrorism Expeditionary
medal pinned to his chest. He and his new wife had just returned to their hotel
from their wedding reception, but he was ignoring her request to get out of
their car. When I spoke with him, I learned that – like me - he had just
returned from Iraq. He had his face in his hands, and he was sobbing that
“they” – meaning the insurgents – had killed his friends.

Once he was aware that I was a fellow war veteran, I managed
to talk him out of his car, and I walked with him and his wife to their hotel
room. As we said goodbye, he began to cry again and buried his face in my
shoulder. What a sight we must have been; the young Marine embracing the old
cop. But it didn’t matter to us because we were brothers-in-arms.

In another incident, I responded to the suicide of a young
war veteran. His memorabilia and photos were displayed proudly throughout his
apartment, but his roommate said he had been depressed since his return from
Iraq.

For a long time, I stood alone with this lifeless warrior
who had survived combat only to die needlessly by his own hand. I couldn’t
remove the lump from my throat or the bitter ache in the pit of my stomach. If
he had only talked to one of us – one of his fellow veterans – maybe we could
have convinced him to ask for help.

For the friends and family members of veterans, please
encourage them to seek help if you sense that they need it. They may or may not
look for that help, but at least you will have done all you could to encourage
them to do so.

To my fellow veterans who suffer from PTSD, who can’t find a
job, or who find themselves homeless, I simply ask that you seek the help that’s
available to you through the Veterans Administration or other organizations. I
also remind you that you may be a civilian now, but you were once one of
America’s best trained warriors. You may have taken the uniform off, but that
same warrior still lives within your soul. You didn’t let the enemy defeat you
on the battlefield; don’t let anything defeat you here. Never quit, and never
surrender. Remember that it takes the strength of a warrior to ask for help.

For other Americans, please remember that you surely pass
veterans every day, and you may not realize:

• That the elderly woman sitting next
to you in the doctor’s office may have been a nurse who was captured in the
Pacific by the Japanese;

• That the disabled man in the wheel
chair once crawled ashore in Normandy as a terrified young G.I.;

• That the man working at the post
office survived a fierce guerrilla war in the jungles of Vietnam;

• That the man working as a greeter at
a department store has the scars of bayonet wounds from hand-to-hand combat in
Korea;

• Or that the young woman sitting in
the college classroom served with the military police in Iraq and was decorated
for heroism.

I remember one of the elderly volunteers who worked for many
years at the Altamonte Springs Police Department. People would pass this man, who was not very
tall and who walked with halting steps because of health problems, and few of
them knew that he had participated in the invasion of Anzio in World War II, or
that he had fought his way through Europe with his fellow soldiers. I knew
because we had talked about our military service. There was much that we
understood that no one else would ever understand.

On this Veterans Day of 2013, America is still at war. But
after twelve years of the War on Terror, we don’t see as many flags on houses
or cars; the “support our troops” bumper stickers are faded, torn or missing
altogether; and we don’t see quite as many yellow ribbons, do we? Americans are
understandably tired of war, but we must not forget that courageous young
Americans are still in harm’s way, conducting the combat patrols, riding in the
convoys, and suffering the casualties.

On this Veteran’s Day, we remember and pray for all of
America’s veterans who have returned to us - whether unscathed, wounded on the
outside, or wounded on the inside. Let us also pray for those brave souls who
are fighting America’s enemies at this very moment, and for the untold numbers
of our veterans who never came home because they gave their lives for us.

We’re standing in a beautiful mall, preparing for a bountiful
holiday season, and we’re able to do so in peace and safety because of the courageous
men and women who are standing between us and those who would harm us, just as
they have for over two hundred years.

There’s a quote I remember from Vietnam that explains very
well the understanding that veterans have of their own sacrifices. It was
supposedly found scrawled on a C-ration box after the siege of Khe Sanh. It
says very simply: “You’ve never lived until you’ve almost died. For those who
have fought for it, freedom has a flavor the protected will never know.”

God bless all of you, God bless America’s veterans and their
families, and God bless the United States of America."

The surviving members of the famed Doolittle raid on Japan
in World War II gathered for their final toast to their comrades:

****

WORLD WAR II’S SURVIVING DOOLITTLE RAIDERS MAKE FINAL TOAST

Fox News

November 10, 2013

Known as the Doolittle
Raiders, the 80 men who risked their lives on a World War II bombing mission on
Japan after the attack on Pearl Harbor were toasted one last time by their
surviving comrades and honored with a Veterans Day weekend of fanfare shared by
thousands.

Three of the four
surviving Raiders attended the toast Saturday at the National Museum of the
U.S. Air Force. Their late commander, Lt. Gen. James "Jimmy"
Doolittle, started the tradition but they decided this autumn's ceremony would
be their last.

LINK: Read "My Last War: A Vietnam Veteran's Tour in Iraq" - The story of The C.O.B.R.A. Team

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The above painting is titled "Dear Mr. President." It was completed by artist Ashley Lauren. The painting depicts Charles Grist as an old soldier in Iraq in 2004 and his reflection in the Vietnam wall when he was a much younger soldier in Vietnam. She presented it to Grist in 2011.

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I am a retired Army Ranger, a veteran of Vietnam and Operation Iraqi Freedom, and a retired police officer with experience in patrol operations, as a plainclothes street crimes officer, and as a criminal investigations detective.